I tried correcting Anshuman's answer, so it could help people with the potential same challenges. His answer pointed me in the right direction, but was pretty far from the answer to the question. So I'll post it here myself.
The LSCOLORS
are set in your ~/.bash_profile
(or ~/.zshrc
-file, if you use Zshell) for your environment. On this page, then you can experiment a bit with the settings and see which letters changes which colors. It's in your current LSCOLORS
that it's setting the color of your executable files to be another color. Here's how you find (and change) that color:
Go to your terminal and write:
echo $LSCOLORS
then it'll print out your current setup, which might be something along these lines:
Gxfxcxdxbxegedabagacad
If you then (in this case) change it to this:
GxfxcxdxDxegedabagacad
Then it would change the colors of the executable files. And what that change comes down to, is which color in your profile, it's pointing to:

ls
is probably aliased to something likels --color=auto
. If you set it tols --color=never
, it won't colour its output. You can also look into theLS_COLORS
env variable and thedircolors
tool that sets it.